The ‘Team of Rivals’ road trip: change.org => change.gov

Executive summary

If you were in the finals of the change.org Ideas for Change competition and have (or know of) an equivalent idea in the Citizens Briefing Book on change.gov, please leave a link in the comments — and look for opportunities to co-promote with other compatible ideas. Also please leave other suggestions for how we might work together moving forward.

Media note

Wow! Less than 24 hours since the change.org competition ended and the competitors are already collaboratively building on it to influence government policy via change.gov’s similar system! It’s almost like they’ve been practicing — and building a coalition!

Details

Here’s how it works. With a Change.gov account, you can suggest an idea on any topic, or award or deduct 10 points (Why 10 rather than 1 or 100? Dunno) from existing ideas you favor or disfavor. The top rated ideas, said senior Obama aide Valerie Jarrett in a video introducing the project, will be compiled into a briefing book to be given to Barack Obama once he takes office. Citizens’ Briefing Book joins Open for Questions and Join the Discussion in the growing list of ways the Obama transition is attempting to tap into the national zeitgeist. One place it differs from Open for Questions, however, is that it allows for linking to individual ideas, making it easier for activists to rally support for their contributions.

For me the best thing about change.org’s Ideas for Change in America was the chance to interact with the supporters of other ideas. As I’ve said a few times, there were plenty of great ideas and they were advocated very effectively. In Neocons’ worst nightmare: net movements intersecting I wrote about the synergies between undocumented students, LGBTQ activists, peace activists, civil libertarians (hiiiiii!), and people demanding Bush Administration accountability. At least from my perspective, these connections got much stronger during the last 48 hours.of the competition.

One thing to highlight here is that these groups really were rivals in Ideas for Change. It was pretty clear that there weren’t going to be enough top 10 slots to go around, even after drug reform advocates unexpected and generous decision not to bogart the leaderboard opened up another space. All of us were “on the bubble” at some points. Still we shared information and often even promoted each others’ ideas. And overall it worked out pretty darn well, although alas not all the ideas made it to the top 10.

So Ike A’s suggestion on my change.org wall that Get FISA Right members and DREAM Activists might want to team up again on the change.gov is an excellent one. Simply by highlighting the link to each others’ Citizens Briefing Book ideas (ours, theirs) we can make it much easier for supporters of both ideas to find out about both of them. We can look for opportunities for joint publicity, and collaborate on promoting our ideas. We can also share techniques: what’s the best way to use the comments on change.gov? When’s a good time for a digging campaign? And so on …

Count me in!*

But why stop there?

The DREAM Act is something that I’m very passionate about, so I’ll certainly prioritize working with them. But it’s important to note that a lot of these opportunities would exist even if that weren’t the case. Take for example Save Small Businesses from the CPSIA, which finished in a virtual tie with my idea on change.org. This isn’t one of my hot button issues, but theirs certainly seems like a perspective that the Obama Administration needs to see and hasn’t gotten a lot of attention in the mainstream media. So I’m more than happy to vote for them on change.gov … and I suspect a lot, although by no means all, of the people I know will view things the same way.

Conversely the vast majority of small business owners and employees, like the vast majority of Americans, are against unchecked government surveillance and for the Constitution and the rule of law. So if I can get our link to them, we’ll likely pick up a lot of votes. Plus based on their 474 (!) endorsements on change.org there’s a lot I can learn from them. It’s a classic win/win situation.

And if you think about it, the same goes for most pairs of ideas in the change.org finals: there are almost always synergies for co-promoting them. Of course there’ll be some situations where the ideas really are incompatible, or the personalities or styles clash too badly for collaboration to be effective, but those will probably be relatively rare.

So let’s take a first step by assembling a list of links to our ideas on change.gov — or equivalent ideas if somebody else has submitted them. For now, let’s accumulate them in the comments. (See my first one for an example.)

We will also want to find ways to make it easier to communicate with each other, and if you have any suggestions please put those in the comments as well.

My research partner Sarah Blankinship and I have been discussing the recent backlash against the idea of a “Team of Rivals”, and think that one of the things going on is that many people have an overly-limited sense of the possibilities. The situation here isn’t the same as Lincoln winning and asking his defeated competitors to work for him. Instead, it’s collaboration between equals who are working to advance each others’ interests while still competing for votes and President-elect Obama’s attention: rivals and also a team.

With many of the Ideas for Change having over 10,000 voters, the combined forces of the finalists can have a huge impact on change.gov. Remember that each vote on change.gov counts as 10 points, so the currently leader’s 63000 points (legalization, of course) only reflects about 6300 votes. Hmm. I find myself looking at Get FISA Right’s current 110 points and thinking “long way to go but it’s potentially doable … I wonder who we can work with on this?”

And I suspect others with ideas are thinking the same. Anybody up for a road trip?

Please leave links, and suggestions, in comments!

jon

* to be clear: I’m posting this as an individual, not on behalf of Get FISA Right

For communications going forward, a MySpace group might be a good place to start. Their discussion functionality is okay and I think they have RSS feeds. Also MySpace is an Ideas for Change partner and so we will all want more of a presence there …

Congratulations Jon and the GFR community! It’s very empowering to collaborate on issues we all care about, which are otherwise ignored or scorned by the Washington Elite. As Kommandate Markos says, let’s Crash The Gates!

We can not let any opportunity that arises fall through our hands. We were successful at change.org, but we can further the cause of passing the DREAM Act in 2009 by getting into the top 10 at change.gov also.

Please we are very behind right now with only 6000 points with the top idea at 60000 points.

We must let our voices be heard so the DREAM Act will be brought up in congress in 2009.

I think a graduated approach to the “team of rivals” idea might be best:

— pride of place to other ideas that “fit” well with GFR’s civil liberties/privacy/rule of law/accountability goals and motives (e.g., special prosecutor, anti-torture advocates). Consistently mention those as “vote for these too” items.

— access, cooperation with ideas that are further afield (e.g., CPSIA toy issue).

But of course learn from them. One possibility might be inviting “give us your best shot” blog posts here (or whatever venue seems best), 250-500 words or whatever, in return for ones at their online campaign HQs. They announce “hey, we did outreach at GFR!”, everybody comes and looks, then sticks around and sees what we’re about. Likewise we read about, e.g., CPSIA and toys etc., and for some that *does* become a hot-button issue.

And a belated response to Thomas: I certainly like the idea of mutual guest-blog posts in general … it’d be interesting to reread my post on this from a couple of weeks ago. One thing we need to be wary of is not overwhelming Get FISA Right readers with interesting-but-off-topic posts. So one possibility is to ask for posts relating others’ issue to ours, something the Dream ACTIvists, Democrats.com, and the “Bridging the Empathy gap” folks all did. From what I understand about the CPSIA, it also seems related to corporate accountability: big companies screwed up in a big way, and as a result the well-intentioned CPSIA was passed and hit small businesses badly. (Apologies if I got this wrong, as I said I’m not an expert.) Seeing this from the perspective of somebody who knows the details of both could be very interesting.

I reached out to some CPSIA supporters in the comments of Yes! Congratulations Crafters! on What the Craft?! and so we’re on a path to creating connections …

Thanks for the link for the FISA idea on .gov – voting done! I am glad this proposal made it to the Top 10 Ideas for Change in America. We need it!

I appreciate the many acts of support for Bridging the Empathy Gap, too, over the last few weeks – loving how you have reached out for team building to many! This is what the “Bridging…” proposal is all about – moving from competition for resources to finding ways to address what is important for us all.

By the way, I created a short URL for Bridging the Empathy Gap on change. gov:http://tinyurl.com/9foedt
Would you check out the proposal on .gov, vote if you are willing and include the link in your blogs, too?

We’d also love any feedback about the proposal on our website at: bridgingtheempathygap.org